Jonathan Liew keeps you abreast of who to look out for on the final day at
Wimbledon.

Fred Perry The Last British Man To Win Wimbledon (copyright everybody) can be evoked in many ways. A simple name-check is most common, although a cut-away shot of his statue in the grounds is becoming increasingly popular. Watch out, too, for the following phrases: “76 years”, “long trousers”, “wooden rackets”, “latest collaboration with the designer Raf Simons”.

The hangers-on Among the dignitaries in the Royal Box will be Pippa Middleton’s sister Kate and Alex Salmond, the batrachian first minister of Scotland. Also attending is David Cameron, gallantly facing down our nation’s many problems by spending a day at the tennis. If Murray hadn’t made the final, you can bet he would have sent Clegg.

Murray’s box At times the BBC’s Wimbledon output appears to constitute live coverage of Murray’s family populated by occasional outbreaks of tennis. By now you should be thoroughly familiar with the faces of girlfriend Kim Sears, mother Judy, brother Jamie and coach Ivan Lendl, as reliably inscrutable as ever.

Federer’s box Given that her husband is the most successful tennis player in history, you wonder why Mirka Federer always looks so worried, whatever the state of the match. Perhaps anxiety is a long-standing cornerstone of their relationship; when she met Federer, after all, he still had a ponytail.

The crowd Last August, in the aftermath of the riots, images of offenders were widely distributed by police in an attempt to bring them to justice. With that in mind, if you are at the match and see anybody shouting “Come on, Tim!” do try and capture a photo of them, so similar punishment can swiftly be meted out.